Kudos to Rep. Nita Lowey (D-NY) — who, as Jonathan noted, used her post as head of the House appropriations subcommittee on foreign aid today to put a hold on $100 million in American assistance to the Lebanese Armed Forces, which was approved for 2010 but not yet disbursed — and to House Foreign Affairs Committee chairman Howard Berman (D-CA), who had applied a hold on the aid even before last Tuesday's deadly border incident, out of concern about reported Hezbollah influence on the LAF. It's encouraging that Congress recognizes the dangers, which I had outlined here earlier, of not responding to
Nevertheless, it's worrying that the administration clearly doesn't share this understanding. The 2009 aid that remained in the pipeline is still being handed over as scheduled, because, a State Department official told the Jerusalem Post, the
Yet on Wednesday, a day after the incident occurred, UNIFIL — an organization not known for its pro-Israel bias — had already confirmed that the Lebanese soldiers fired first, without provocation, and that no Israeli soldiers had strayed into Lebanese territory, contrary to
But it gets even worse. The official also told the Post, "we continue to believe that our support to the LAF and ISF [Internal Security Forces] will contribute toward improving regional security." How exactly does supporting an army that has just launched an unprovoked, deadly, cross-border attack on a neighbor — and whose government has just announced that it no longer recognizes the international border, thereby implying that more such attacks are likely to follow — "contribute toward improving regional security"?
Continuing the pretense that
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